Job 18:16

16 The roots of him be made dry beneath; and be his ripe corn all-broken above. (His roots shall be made dry beneath; and all his branches shall wither above.)

Job 18:16 Meaning and Commentary

Job 18:16

His roots shall be dried up beneath
Wicked men are sometimes compared to trees; to trees of the wood, barren, and unfruitful; to trees without fruit, twice dead, plucked up by the roots; and sometimes to green bay trees, very flourishing for a while, and which on a sudden perish, and come to nothing, see ( Song of Solomon 2:3 ) ( Jude 1:12 ) ( Psalms 37:35 Psalms 37:36 ) ; and such a simile is here used; and by his roots may be meant his family, from whence he sprung, which now should be extinct with him, see ( Isaiah 11:1 ) ( Daniel 11:7 ) ; or his substance, which being greatly increased, he seemed to take root in the earth, and not only to be in a prosperous, but in a stable settled condition; but now, like Ephraim, he should be smitten, and his root dried up; all his wealth, and all the resources of it, should be exhausted, be no more, see ( Jeremiah 12:2 ) ( Hosea 9:16 ) ;

and above shall his branch be cut off;
his children that sprung from him, as branches from a tree, and were his glory and beauty, these should be cut off; referring no doubt in both clauses to Job's present circumstances, whose root in the time of his prosperity was spread out by the waters, but now dried up, and on whose branches the dew lay all night, but now cut off, ( Job 29:19 ) ; so the Targum,

``his children shall be cut off out of the earth, and from heaven his destruction shall be decreed;''

both clauses signify the utter destruction of the family of the wicked man, root and branch, see ( Malachi 4:1 ) . It is a beautiful description of a tree struck with thunder and lightning, and burnt and shattered to pieces, and agrees with ( Job 18:15 ) .

Job 18:16 In-Context

14 His trust be taken away from his tabernacle; and perishing, as a king, above-tread on him. (He shall be torn away from the safety of his tent; and perishing, or destruction, shall tread all over him, like a king.)
15 The fellows of him that is not, that is, the fellows of a dead man, dwell in his tabernacle; and brimstone be sprinkled in his tabernacle. (The fellows, or friends, of him who is not, that is, the friends of he who is dead, shall live in his tent; and brimstone, or sulphur, shall be sprinkled all around it to ward off evil.)
16 The roots of him be made dry beneath; and be his ripe corn all-broken above. (His roots shall be made dry beneath; and all his branches shall wither above.)
17 His mind perish from the earth; and his name be not made solemn in streets. (His memory shall perish from the earth; and his name shall be forgotten in the streets.)
18 He shall put him out from light into darknesses; and he shall bear him over from the world. (He shall be put out from the light into the darkness; and he shall be carried over from this world into the next.)
Copyright © 2001 by Terence P. Noble. For personal use only.